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16 80 70 60 CHARLES BUKOWSKI, KING OF THE UNDERGROUND Bukowski’s periodical appearances, 1950–69 Mag. titles Mag. 2 This graph, based on all the Bukowski bibliographies published to date and on several hundred periodicals located in American libraries, displays the chronological total number of magazine titles as well as the total number of magazine issues featuring Bukowski’s work from 1950 to 1969. 1, the increase in publications becomes evident in the late 1950s. While the Modernism-influenced journals were being displaced by the emerging Beat publications, other literary movements were taking shape all across the United States or they unequivocally consolidated their relevance on the literary scene.

He was evidently dissatisfied with both literary vehicles, but the littles came off worst in his assessment. The underground press was not spared. Bukowski was aware of the substantial circulation figures of most underground newspapers and he knew that his work would reach a larger audience than via the littles and, yet, he harshly attacked them and criticized their so-called revolutionary spirit—many editors saw newspapers as tools for the revolution and not as mere news outfits. However, it did not escape Bukowski that, by 1969, the vast majority of those alternative newspapers carried too many sex advertisements in order to generate substantial profits.

R. / Bukowski”). George Kimball, who coedited Grist magazine with John Fowler and Charles Plymell in the mid-1960s, reminisced that Bukowski “was writing pretty much daily, making up for lost time, as it were, and had a pretty substantial backlog of material and was always looking for new exposure in magazines he found to his liking” (Kimball). Biographer Howard Sounes claimed that Judson Crews—a prolific author and editor himself—had explained to him that Bukowski’s obsession to achieve literary recognition could reach suicidal heights: “[Bukowski] wrote to me and said to please publish his poems, else he was going to commit suicide” (qtd.